SGLMG chats with 78ers on 42nd anniversary of first Mardi Gras parade

78ers Diane Minnis and Lance Mumby had a (physically distanced) chat with Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras CEO Albert Kruger on the 42nd anniversary of the first Mardi Gras parade.

Watch their discussion below or by clicking here to go to the SGLMG YouTube page.

Newsletter - June 2020

Newsletter - June 2020
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June 2020
As we approach the 24 June anniversary of the first Mardi Gras in 1978, we are in unprecedented times. We are constrained from all but small gatherings, disgusted by police brutality both here and overseas and see an extraordinary upsurge in Black Lives Matter protests around the world.

With hundreds of Pride marches and events cancelled, the 24-hour, online Global Pride 2020 on 27 June will be the world's biggest Pride celebration.

In this edition of the First Mardi Gras Inc. Newsletter, we have:
  • our joint statement with First Nations Rainbow
  • Ken Davis on The new pandemic
  • Robyn Kennedy on Global Pride 2020 and its Black Lives Matter focus
  • Robert French with updates to Fifty fabulous years of LGBTIQ visibility and achievement events
  • notice of a Regional and Rural Outreach meeting from SGLMG 78ers Committee members Helen Golan and Sallie Colechin
  • sad news of the death of leading Egyptian activist Sarah Hegazi.
Diane Minnis
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Joint Statement on Black Lives Matter protests
 

First Nations people and 78ers looked on with disgust at the police behaviour following the first Black Lives Matter rally in Sydney, earlier this month.

After a legal, approved rally proceeded without incident, police forced a crowd at Central Station into the narrow suburban concourse on Eddy Avenue and surrounded them. The crowd was not allowed (or even ordered) to disperse. 

Instead these people were forced in upon themselves with no regard for the social distancing that the police claimed to be upholding. The result was panic and outraged resistance – exactly the response that the police had intended to provoke. 

Police then used violence and pepper spray on innocent people and some officers even laughed.

This long standing NSW police tactic is one 78ers remember well – when protesters were trapped, bashed and arrested in Kings Cross by police on 24 June 1978. It wasn’t right then, and it isn’t right now.

78ers have now received an apology from the Police Commissioner for the behaviour of NSW Police in 1978. But the NSW Police have demonstrated that they have not changed.

First Nations people were there rallying in protest, as we have many times before, calling for justice, calling for freedom, demanding that the police and justice systems stop killing us. 

First Nations people experience individual and systemic racism, discrimination and injustice throughout our lands. We endure over-policing of our communities and suffer from the disproportionate incarceration rates of our people. We witness the ongoing destruction of our sacred and cultural sites. We grieve the more than 400 deaths in custody since the Royal Commission. We have not seen justice for these crimes against our people.

Despite so many of our people at the rally being personally impacted by these injustices, the Black Lives Matter protest in Sydney proceeded without incident. People committed to social distancing and other infection control measures.

Our communities were passionate but peaceful. The police were not.

The NSW Police Force’s actions added trauma and further injustice to a day where our communities were exercising their human right to protest against the lethal racism we face.

As LGBTQI First Nations people, we know the compounding of discrimination puts us at further risk from police. The fear for our communities, our loved ones and us in relation to the police and justice system’s discrimination and violence is real, ongoing and current.

Those protesters at Central Station deserve an apology. First Nations people deserve apologies and need urgent systemic change to stop the targeting of their communities by police and the justice system and to stop deaths in custody.

First Nations Rainbow and First Mardi Gras Inc. stand together to say that Black Lives Matter!

The slogan of the 78ers – STOP POLICE ATTACKS! ON GAYS, WOMEN AND BLACKS! – is still relevant today and just as urgent.
 

First Nations Rainbow                                First Mardi Gras Inc.
admin@firstnationsrainbow.org.au               info@78ers.org.au

Membership renewals

Thank you to all those who have responded to our renewal drive for First Mardi Gras Inc. membership and to those who have updated their contact details.

Many have moved to distant locations. Our ‘diaspora’ is spreading far across the country and overseas. We would like to maintain strong contact with all 78ers so that we can properly represent your interests when working with Mardi Gras and other organisations.

One of our members, Ross Smith, was recently in hospital for more than 2 months. Anyone who knows Ross might like to contact him, though he has no email address at present.

The Committee send their best wishes to Ross for his full and speedy recovery.

Barry Charles - Membership Coordinator

Congratulations to Frank Howarth AM
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Congratulations to FMG Inc. member Frank Howarth who was made a Member of the Order of Australia in the Queen’s Birthday Honours List.

Frank told us: I've always been someone who thrives on change and doing my little bit to make the world a better place. This was what motivated my participation in the 78 Mardi Gras, and drives my work in the arts, museums and galleries sector.

I'm extremely chuffed to have received the AM in recognition of that work. Creativity is at the heart of the cultural sector, and interestingly, the most creative people I know are in the LGBTI community. And I could not have done this without the support of my partner Peter McCarthy!
Frank Howarth (left), Peter McCarthy (right)  

The new pandemic

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Jakub and David (@jakubidawid) wandered the tri-city towns of Gdańsk, Gdynia and Sopot on a mission to remove the stigma of homosexuality after 30 LGBTQ-free zones were declared around Poland in August 2019. Photo courtesy of Sydney Star Observer.


The day after our 43rd Mardi Gras parade, Australia saw its first COVID-19 fatality. Within a brief period, travel and work and schools and social life closed down.

COVID-19 is a global emergency riding the top of the waves of the climate crisis, and the existing economic and geo-political crisis.

Most 78ers are particularly vulnerable because of age and health status, so the imposed and self-directed isolation has been intense. For those of us living with HIV, COVID-19 poses particular issues; see 78er, Ross Duffin’s article: https://napwha.org.au/positive/covid-19-vaccines-treatments-and-people-with-hiv.

For most of us the sudden change has been very profound: not going to work, not seeing friends or family, not being able to access face-to-face services, not going to restaurants, films, concerts, sports, funerals or demonstrations. Our meetings have gone online. For those of us cohabiting, lockdown might have caused increased interpersonal tensions, for those living alone, unprecedented social isolation may be a bleak experience.

Mainstream guidance on social distancing was silent about personal intimacies with people who are not your cohabitants or monogamous partners. Initially LGBTIQ and HIV community organisations were reticent to talk explicitly about casual sex and drugs in this pandemic. Gay businesses, sex on premises venues and sex work closed and even the apps wound down.

The economic impacts on our 78ers’ generation/s are as yet uncalculated: loss of working incomes, superannuation, assets, entitlements, services or security. Some sectors, such as hospitality and the arts are devastated. On the other hand, the wealth of the super-rich has massively increased in 2020.

With migration, labour and student migration, partner and refugee applications frozen, the situation of LGBTIQ non-residents is critical, either in Australia or overseas.

COVID-19 reawakens our collective trauma and grief of the four decade long AIDS pandemic, which kills 800,000 globally each year, despite treatments. Comparisons with HIV require caution. HIV is transmissible but not contagious (and therefore more easily prevented through behaviour change), has a potentially very long period of infectivity, has higher fatality rates over much longer timescale, but is now treatable. Unfortunately our friend Trump “mis-spoke” about having an HIV vaccine already. Fortunately for us, apart from some fringe Christian extremists, this is an epidemic not being blamed on sexuality and gender identity minorities.

But there are lessons for this pandemic from AIDS about community and mass mobilisation. There is a need to build on the victories about keeping the intellectual property of the virus, testing, treatments and vaccines freely available internationally in public ownership, so that Big Pharma cannot profiteer and restrict access to those who can pay. COVID-19 highlights health access inequalities and reinforces the need for public health to be in public control.

The Coronavirus pandemic has exacerbated racism and xenophobia in Australia and globally, eliciting strong fightbacks. On a deeper global level, the pandemic comes at a time of receding democratic space, a world controlled by science-denying, religious, ultra-nationalist, demagogic monsters – Trump, BoJo, Bolsonaro, Modi, Xi Jinping, Erdogan, Duterte, Sisi, Netanyahu, Orban, Bin Zayed, Duda, Bin Salman…. and our own Pentecostal Scomo. This reactionary and authoritarian climate poses existential threats to the freedom of LGBTIQ people and communities in many countries. Think of what is happening in the legislative agenda right now in USA, Poland, Indonesia and Hungary. We must gear up our international solidarity activism, much like we did at the time of the first Mardi Gras in 1978.

In the northern hemisphere, the annual LGBTIQ freedom/pride season around the Stonewall anniversary in late June or early July has gone virtual. Global Pride 2020 is online, and focussing in solidarity with Black Lives Matter. See the following article for our engagement with Global Pride. Despite COVID-19 restrictions, and spurred by anti-police and anti-racism mobilisations, several alternative Queer Pride demonstrations are planned, or have been held, for example in Hollywood, Denver and Brooklyn. This is addition to visible queer participation in Black Lives Matter demonstrations in Australia, Europe and the Americas.
Ken Davis
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Global Pride 2020 – Black Lives Matter

The COVID-19 pandemic has had a devastating impact on Pride organisations worldwide with hundreds of marches and events cancelled or postponed. On Saturday 27 June, Pride organisations from across the world will celebrate Global Pride 2020.

#BlackLivesMatter will be the central focus of Global Pride. Global Pride leaders have said they will amplify black voices, acknowledging the international response to the death of George Floyd and the unprecedented demand for racial justice by working with founders of the Black Lives Matter movement. 

Co-Chair of the Global Pride organising committee, Natalie Thompson, said: “As a Black woman in the LGBTQIA+ community, I feel we must confront the systemic racism and violence facing my Black brothers, sisters and non-binary siblings, in the larger culture and within the LGBQIA+ community. I could not think of a larger platform than Global Pride to do this.

“I am proud to work beside so many diverse colleagues from around the world. Our community knows well that we must confront hate and prejudice head-on. We have been watching an epidemic of violence against trans people of colour – mostly women – in the past decade and this larger discussion must be inclusive and all encompassing. All Black Lives Matter.”

Global Pride is a 24-hour stream of music, performances, speeches and messages of support, hosted by Todrick Hall on his YouTube channel on 27 June, as well as on iHeartRadio’s YouTube channel and on the Global Pride website.

Key speakers include former US Vice President Joe Biden, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Icelandic President Guðni Jóhannesson, Irish Taoiseach Leo Varadkar, UN Independent Expert on Protection against violence and discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity Victor Madrigal Borloz, and European Commissioner for Equality Helena Dalli.

Artists including Adam Lambert, Kesha, Rita Ora, The Village People, Mel C, Leann Rimes, Pussy Riot, Calum Scott, Natasha Bedingfield, Bebe Rexha, Stephen Fry, Leslie Jorden, Russell Tovey and Mary Lambert have joined the already-impressive line-up.

More than 500 Pride organisations submitted more than 1,000 pieces of content for Global Pride, and the volunteer production team are now editing the content to pull the 24 hour stream together. Global Pride is supported by partners YouTube and We Are Social, and media partners DIVA, Q.Media and Time Out.

Executive Producer for Global Pride, Michelle Meow, said: "Fifty years ago, grassroots organizations came together to plan the first Gay Liberation Day that changed the world, incuding the Daughters of Bilitis, Gay Liberation Front, Mattachine Society and Lavender Menace. The production of Global Pride has been planned in the same grassroots manner, but with a 21st century technological twist. LGBTQIA+ people from around the world will come together virtually during this crisis of racial injustice and a pandemic.”

I am the Global Pride Producer for three times zones – covering East Asia, South East Asia and Western Australia. We are bringing previously unheard Pride voices from Asia, including Bhutan, Cambodia, China, Malaysia, Myanmar, Indonesia, onto the global stage. We have content from every continent – even from Antarctica!

For an Australian perspective on Black Lives Matter, we have First Nations contributors including First Nations Rainbow and Aboriginal deaf gay artist Daniel McDonald.

We hope you're as excited as us for what is shaping up to be the world's biggest Pride celebration!
Robyn Kennedy
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Fifty fabulous years of LGBTIQ visibility and achievement

Unfortunately, the COVID-19 pandemic has led to the postponement of several events planned to celebrate our 50th Years of LGBTIQ Visibility and Achievement.

The HomoHist Conference due for November now can’t go ahead, though it may be reprogrammed for February.

The Friendship as a Way of Life exhibition at the UNSW Galleries in Paddington, running from 8 May to 21 November, is currently a virtual exhibition only. However, it is hoped to have the Gallery opened for visitors shortly, and the proposed history walk(s) of the Taylor Square area will still go ahead. Meanwhile checkout Mother Inferior’s exorcism.

The good news is that the Being Seen and Heard: early gay and lesbian activism exhibition will open in late November and go through to 25 April 2021. The State Library will mount the exhibition in a larger gallery than was first planned.

And, Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras is being approached with the proposal that the theme of next year’s parade, even if only virtual, reflect the beginnings of Visibility and Achievement. To pay homage to the early pioneers who founded CAMP Inc., the Daughters of Bilitis, the two early and independent, University Campus groups, and Sydney Gay Liberation.
Robert French
unswgalleries Exorcism for Healing the World by Mother Inferior of The Sisters of The Order of Perpetual Indulgence Sydney. Instagram video by @unswgalleries: https://www.instagram.com/tv/B_6LxeOA0hJ/?utm_source=ig_web_button_share_sheet
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Regional and Rural Outreach by SGLMG 78ers Committee

Dear 78ers
This is Helen Golan and Sallie Colechin from the 78ers Committee of Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras. Many older 78ers say they would like to be more connected to our communities, so we thought we would run a Zoom meeting to talk specifically about what support might be available especially in rural/regional areas.

If you are a 78er over 60 and live in a rural or regional area, join us on Zoom at 2pm on Saturday 11 July 2020.

We will hear from Russ Gluyas from ACON's LOVE Project - Living Older Visibly and Engaged - and social work academic, Virginia Mansel Lees. And there will be plenty of time for discussion.

Email us on helengollan@yahoo.com.au OR salliecolechin@icloud.com. If you are interested in participating and we will send you a link to join the meeting.

Cheers

Helen and Sallie
on behalf of the elected SGLMG 78ers Committee

Photo Manning River, Wingham. Copyright Sallie Colechin
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Mourning a leading Egyptian activist – Vale Sarah Hegazi

Sarah Hegazy’s death is a terrible blow to Arab and Muslim lesbian and gay activists in Australia, particularly for those who knew her personally, and for networks of queer activists across Africa and West Asia. It is a globally significant loss for the LGBTIQ freedom movement.

Sarah was found dead in her home in Toronto on 13 June. Sarah took her own life at age 30, leaving a letter that reads: “To my sisters and brothers – I tried to find redemption and failed, forgive me. To my friends – the experience was harsh and I am too weak to resist it, forgive me. To the world – you were cruel to a great extent, but I forgive.”

Sarah was a revolutionary socialist, feminist and queer activist. Sarah was transformed during the 2011 people’s revolution that overthrew Mubarak: “I never felt so alive as during the revolution”. She was dismissed from her job because of her opposition to the Western supported dictator, Sisi, who she described in an article in January as “the most oppressive and violent dictator in our modern history”.

She exuberantly carried a rainbow flag at a concert in Cairo in September 2017 by Lebanese band Mashrou’ Leyla, whose lead singer, Hamed Sinno, is gay. After the concert Sarah and 74 men were arrested for promoting sexual deviancy in a major crackdown against lesbian and gay rights. She was imprisoned and tortured for three months. She was trying to survive PTSD after she went into exile in Canada in 2018.

Hamed Sinno tweeted: irwahik alhuriat, “your soul is free”, but Sarah’s friends are distressed at the wave of denunciations in Arabic on social media, blaming her death on her politics, lack of religion, and lesbianism.

Sarah’s death underlines the urgency of solidarity with activists in countries facing deepening repression, and the specific needs of queer asylum seekers. Our condolences to her friends and comrades. Thowra mustamira Sarah rafeqa, the revolution will continue.
Ken Davis
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Graffiti in Amman, Jordan - now removed.
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OutStanding Short Story Competition

 

The OutStanding LGBTQIA+ short story competition 2020 has officially begun. The theme for this year is ‘Reconnection’.

For Competition Rules and Entry Form, go to: https://outstandingstories.net/entry-details/

Entries close at 11.59pm Tuesday 1 September and winners will be announced on Sunday 27 September.

Newsletter - April 2020

Newsletter - April 2020
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April 2020

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Message from Co-Chairs

The Covid-19 pandemic has dramatically changed our personal lives – and has similarly impacted the organisational life of First Mardi Gras Inc.

Social distancing rules have halted our general meetings and regular forums. So we are trying to find different ways to maintain our connections and communications with you, by producing our newsletter more frequently and posting news and interesting links on our Facebook pages and website https://www.78ers.org.au/.

Our Committee will be meeting regularly by video chat and will continue to consider issues of interest and importance to 78ers. We are also looking to provide support to people who need it and identify 78ers who are able to provide practical help or phone/video chat support. You can also continue to contact us through our email address info@78ers.org.au and we’ll respond promptly.

So...until the crisis stabilises, stay safe and well. We look forward to seeing you in-person on the other side!

Betty Hounslow and Ken Davis

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Daylesford and Wagga – Saturday 7 & 14 March 2020

Helen Gollan and the 78ers banner led the Daylesford ChillOut Festival Parade with the assistance of the Trentham Youth Group.

The Wagga Wagga Mardi Gras Parade was cancelled at short notice but Helen, Barry Charles and Karl Zlotkovski travelled to Wagga with the 78ers banner and attended some smaller events along with other 78ers.

Hay Mardi Gras in late March was cancelled as was Newcastle Pride, planned for August. Central Coast Twist, Tamworth Pride and the Broken Heel Festival are yet to announce whether they will be going ahead later this year.

Photo above left: Helen Gollan and the Trentham Youth Group at Daylesford ChillOut Festival. Photo above right, from left: Karl Zlotkovski, Helen Gollan and Barry Charles in Wagga.
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Providing support to our community


In this time of Covid-19 and social distancing, many in our community are finding it tough. It will be a difficult few months ahead for many and with age and health related risk factors involved, we need to develop ways of staying connected.

We are looking to provide support to people who need it and identify 78ers who are able to provide practical help or phone/video chat support. Here are some suggested protocols for collecting and delivering goods in these times: https://wiki.queercare.network/index.php?title=Category:Protocol.

The National LGBTI Health alliance page https://lgbtihealth.org.au/ has Covid-19 and health support information including on the QLife counselling and referral service for LGBTI people.

Let us know if you need:
  • some practical help going to medical appointments, picking up shopping or medicines
  • the support of a regular phone or video chat.
Let us know if you could provide support via regular phone or video chat to 78ers.

Please respond to info@78ers.org.au if you need some support or would be interested in helping out people in our community.

Anne Morphett

Fifty Fabulous Years!

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Early 70s activism. Photo Phillip Potter
 
This year we reach the fiftieth anniversary of visibility in the history of LGBTI people in Australia. In 1970 and 1971, with the public announcements of the formation of the Australian Lesbian Movement and the Campaign Against Moral Persecution, homosexual visibility became a reality here.

Before then, there were no openly homosexual organisations, only closeted social groups.

This is what makes the formation of the ALM and CAMP Inc. truly significant. Because of the bravery of our sisters and brothers back then, especially those in CAMP Inc., who first publically put their head above the parapet, all else flowed.

We helped change perceptions within the community and the medical profession about what it means to be homosexual and we demanded equality. We achieved anti-discrimination legislation and homosexual law reform, fought and overcame the scourge of HIV, won relationship recognition in the immigration and refugee system, and – eventually – gained marriage equality.

First Mardi Gras Inc., the Pride History Group and CAMP Goes Gold had planned a series of celebrations and events but the Corona virus will impact these plans. We are still hoping to gather on 19 September, the 50th anniversary of the formation of CAMP Inc. The State Library of NSW intends to hold an exhibition Seen and Heard: the early years of gay achievement, though there may be some social distancing limits. Unfortunately, the history conference, planned for November at UTS, will be postponed, though smaller local forums may be possible.

We will keep you in touch with further developments with these events.

Robert French
 
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Keep up your First Mardi Gras Inc. membership

For some First Mardi Gras Inc. members, it will soon be time to renew your membership. Our fees are modest – $10 a year or $5 a year concession – but they help maintain our incorporated community association as a representative, consultative and sustainable organisation for 78ers.

Your fees contribute to the cost of running our website and email system and for hire of venues when we are again able to meet and host forums and events.
With over 180 members (including 17 Associate Members), we want to continue to celebrate our history, inspire our community and fight for the future. We want to continue to:
  • Keep in touch with each other, particularly during the Covid-19 epidemic
  • Advocate for appropriate support and services for our ageing community
  • Support community campaigns, including against the Religious Discrimination Act
  • Provide a strong voice for 78ers on the elected SGLMG 78ers Committee.
If you would like to renew your membership, look out in May for an email and membership form. If you would like to join First Mardi Gras Inc. or have a partner or friend who are interested in joining as an Associate Member, email us at info@78ers.org.au.

Barry Charles - Membership Coordinator
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European Pride Organisers Association

First Mardi Gras Inc. has joined the European Pride Organisers Association (EPOA) as an associate member. EPOA is the network of European Pride organisations that promotes Pride as a celebration and a vital human rights movement.

We have a strong interest in global LGBTQI human rights and are keen to support campaigns such as those against regressive policies in Eastern Europe. We will be participating in the EPOA Online Global Pride celebration in June. Watch this space for links to events and displays!
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Garry Wotherspoon’s new book
 
This month, First Mardi Gras Inc. member Garry Wotherspoon’s new book has been published. 'Through the Gay Looking Glass' is a fascinating history/biography of Clive Madigan.

Garry is also the author of the bestselling 'Gay Sydney: A History.' Both books are available from The Bookshop, Darlinghurst.

Vale Sandi Banks
15.7.1950 – 16.3.20020

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Sandi Banks has passed away peacefully after a long and brave battle with cancer.

Sandi and then partner Jo Eccleston, Ken Davis and I were very active in the Gay Solidarity Group and the Drop the Charges Campaign. Our friendship was forged in this fightback against the arrests in the first Mardi Gras.

Sandi was a committed activist for many years. In recent years Sandi was also a stalwart spokesperson for 78ers, calling for and responding to a Police apology for the events of 1978. Sandi was also one of five proud founding members of First Mardi Gras Inc.

Only two weeks before she died, Sandi and her partner Jean travelled from the south coast to be on the 78ers bus in the 2020 Mardi Gras Parade. Sandi was buried in the 78ers t-shirt she wore that night.

On 27 March a small number of us were able to farewell Sandi in a lovely ceremony in front of rolling surf. Fabian Los Shaiavo participated by video, leading us in a poignant rendition of Thank you Lord for Gay Liberation.

Sandi will be sadly missed by her many friends, including me, partner Jean and former partner and long standing friend Jo.

Slip away, slip away like ripples on the sea
You’ll never slip away from all our memories.


Donations in memory of Sandi to the Cancer Council (for research purposes) would be appreciated.

Diane Minnis
 
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Left: Sandi Banks in the first Mardi Gras. Right: Sandi in 2018.

Participation Grants

FMG Inc. members can apply for small grants to assist with projects that reflect FMG Inc. objectives. Grants may be used to help with:
  • Part travel costs
  • Part conference registration fees
  • Administrative costs (postage, photocopying)
  • Purchase of materials and resources.
For further details email us at info@78ers.org.au.

Newsletter - March 2020

Newsletter - March 2020
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March 2020

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Mardi Gras Parade – Saturday 29 February 2020

There were about 100 excited 78ers, partners and guests in our Mardi Gras Parade 2020 78ers contingent.

We carried the new 78ers The First Mardi Gras Australia banner (provided by Mardi Gras) and placards made by 78ers in the MG Workshop. The 78ers once again received a great reception from the estimated 300,000 spectators and we were able to enjoy the more spacious 78er areas at both the Parade Marshalling area and the new viewing area. The bus to Central after the Parade, however, is on the must improve list for next year!

Thanks to the SGLMG elected 78ers Committee for organising the float and communicating with 78ers as well as passing on our concerns to Mardi Gras.

Thanks to Sandra Gobbo for posting the photo collections to both our Facebook pages and our website https://www.78ers.org.au/. And many thanks to William Brougham for videoing the Mardi Gras Parade and our Lavender Menace forum and to Jeffrey Feng for his Parade photos of us. A big thank you to Meagan Lawson from COTA who marched with our contingent to photograph 78ers during the night.
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Daylesford, Wagga & Hay Mardi Gras – Saturday 7, 14 & 28 March 2020
Help carry this banner with other 78ers in the upcoming Daylesford ChillOut Festival and the Wagga Wagga and Hay Mardi Gras Parades. To join us, please contact Helen Gollan on 0427 042 810 (text only) or Barry Charles on 0404 241 308.
78ers also have plans to attend the Newcastle and Tamworth Prides and the Broken Heel Festival later in the year.
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A Lavender Menace? Forum – Saturday 15 February

About 70 women and a number of men enjoyed the forum. Dr Sophie Robinson, Dr Sue Wills and Robyn Plaister spoke on the pivotal role of lesbians in early lesbian and gay movements.  Also marked was the 50th anniversary of the formation of the Australasian Lesbian Movement.
Many fine contributions were made during the Q&A. The forum – hosted jointly by First Mardi Gras Inc. and Pride History Group – is the first in a series: 50 Fabulous Years of Liberation.
Photo William Brougham. Video of Forum William Brougham

Fair Day – Sunday 16 February 2020

At Fair Day, the 78ers tent was one of the coolest and breeziest places to visit. We had a steady stream of people asking about our history as well as 78ers visiting. A raffle was popular and raised funds for the pre-Parade social gathering for all 78ers. SGLMG 78ers Committee members Rae Giffen and Lance Mumby spoke from the main stage. 78er Peter de Waal also spoke on the 50th anniversary of the formation of CAMP Inc. – the Campaign Against Moral Persecution.
Below: Rae Giffen and Lance Mumby speaking at Fair Day on behalf of 78ers. Photo Diane Minnis
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History Walks: Saturday 22 & Sunday 23 February 

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Robert French led two history walks during the 2020 Mardi Gras season:
  • Saturday 22 February – 10th Anniversary ACON Spark Youth Group Walk, King’s Cross and Oxford Street.
  • Sunday 23 February 2020 – 30th Anniversary Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence Walk: The Colony of Sydney and its Gay History.
Pictured above is the large crowd who attended the SPI Walk, where Robert was canonised as Saint Robert of the Rainbow Chronicles.

Reunion42: Friday 28 February, Colombian Hotel

First Mardi Gras Inc. again hosted our pre-Parade social gathering for 78ers, their partners and friends at the Columbian Hotel. We had a great roll-up with a lot of catching up with old friends and interest in the raffle and lucky door prize. 78ers also collected t-shirts again provided by SGLMG.
Photo below William Brougham
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Mardi Gras Parade 2020 Photos

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Two photos above Meagan Lawson. Photo below Gordana Drakulic 
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Photos below Meagan Lawson, except for photo of Robert with flag, Jeffrey Feng 
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Calendar of Events

  • Saturday 7 March 2020 – Daylesford ChillOut Festival Parade
  • Saturday 14 March 2020 – Wagga Wagga Mardi Gras Parade 
  • Saturday 21 March 2020 - First Mardi Gras Inc. General Meeting, Macleay Room, Rex Centre, 58A Macleay St (entrance near Baroda St), Potts Point
  • Saturday 28 March 2020 – Hay Mardi Gras Parade

Participation Grants

FMG Inc. members can apply for small grants to assist with projects that reflect FMG Inc. objectives. Grants may be used to help with:
  • Part travel costs
  • Part conference registration fees
  • Administrative costs (postage, photocopying)
  • Purchase of materials and resources.
For further details email us at info@78ers.org.au.

Mardi Gras Shorts 2020

The 78ers are the valiant group of people who gathered at Taylor Square on a Saturday in June 1978 to march down Oxford Street at a time when homosexuality was still a criminal act. #78ers #whatmatters #mardigras2020 #sydneymardigras

Thanks to William Brougham for the video. Visit his YouTube channel for many more videos of the 78ers

MTV: Meet The 78ers - Four LGBTQIA+ Activists Tell The Story Of Sydney's First Mardi Gras

78ers Penny Gulliver, David Abello, Sandra Gobbo and Robert French sat down to speak with MTV Australia during the lead up to Mardi Gras 2020.

Read the full article on the MTV Australia website by clicking here, and watch the video of the interviews below or on YouTube.

Reunion 42

T’was the night before Mardi Gras, when all through the house all the 78ers were gathering…. for Reunion 42! Happy Mardi Gras everyone 🏳️‍🌈

Photos from Anne Morphett, Helen Gollan & William Brougham.

A very happy Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras from the Mardi Gras 78ers. #sydneymardigras #sydneygayandlesbianmardigras #whatmatters

Thanks to William Brougham for the video. Check out his YouTube channel for more great videos.

Article: 'How do I convince the Home Office I'm a lesbian?'

This is a powerful story about the trials and tribulations of seeking refugee status on the grounds of sexuality in the UK. Amnesty International confirms that similar problems can exist here.

Image: BBC

Image: BBC

Angel fled Zimbabwe in fear of her life after police found her in bed with another woman five years ago. It's taken most of the time since then for her to convince the Home Office that she is gay and will be persecuted if she returns. But how do you prove something you spent your life trying to hide?

Click here to read the article from the BBC

Video: A Lavender Menace? Australia's Early Lesbian History.

About 70 women and a number of men enjoyed the forum. Dr Sophie Robinson, Dr Sue Wills and Robyn Plaister spoke on the pivotal role of lesbians in early lesbian and gay movements.

Also marked was the 50th anniversary of the formation of the Australasian Lesbian Movement.

Many fine contributions were made during the Q&A. The forum – hosted jointly by First Mardi Gras Inc. and Pride History Group – was the first in a series: 50 Fabulous Years of Liberation.

A panel and audience discussion titled 'A Lavender Menace? Australia's Early Lesbian History'. The event was hosted by First Mardi Gras Inc and Sydney's Pride History Group on Saturday February 15, 2020.

Thanks to William Brougham for the video. Check out his YouTube channel for more videos.

Newsletter - February 2020

Newsletter - February 2020
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February 2020

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Saturday 15 February 2020
To explore the pivotal role played by lesbians in the early lesbian and gay movement and mark the 50th anniversary of the founding of the Australasian Lesbian Movement, the Pride History Group and First Mardi Gras Inc. are hosting this forum. 2-4pm, Beneledi House, 194 Glebe Point Road, Glebe (next to the Library, corner Wigram Rd).
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Fair Day Sunday 16 February 2020

Mardi Gras is again providing a large 78ers tent for us at Fair Day. A wide variety of people come in to talk to 78ers about our history and we have a leaflet we can hand out. A couple of 78ers will be interviewed on the main stage around 12.45pm.

The tent is a chill out space for 78ers and many of us are wearing our 78ers t-shirts.

No bottled water will be on sale, so bring a plastic water bottle that you can refill at several points around the park.

Toby Zoates with visitors to the 78ers tent. Photo Anne Morphett

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History Walks Saturday 22-23 February 2020

Robert French is leading two history walks:
# 10:15 am, Saturday 22 February 2020 – ACON Spark Youth Group History Walk: for under 26ers, King’s Cross & Oxford Street.
# 9:45 am, Sunday 23 February 2020 – SPI History Walk: The Colony of Sydney and its Gay history.

Why was Sydney referred to as ’sodom in the south’? What was the status of lesbians? Where was Sydney’s first beat? These are just some of the questions to be answered on the SPI Walk.

This will be the 30th Anniversary SPI History Walk and the 10th Anniversary Youth Group walk. https://www.mardigras.org.au/program.

Sydney Star Observer photo of Robert French at the First Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence History Walk in 1990

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LGBTQI+ Elders Dance Club 2pm, Saturday 22 February
Mardi Gras has invited 78ers to this free social event for rainbow elders, creating a space that is safe and inclusive (and with afternoon tea). It’s at the Seymour Centre (Corner City Road and Cleveland Street, Chippendale). MG are also offering 78ers two free tickets to Fuck Fabulous, 8pm that night at the Seymour Center. Reception@mardigrasarts.org.au.
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Reunion42 Friday 28 February 2020

First Mardi Gras Inc. is again this year hosting a pre-Parade social gathering for 78ers, their partners and friends. The event will be upstairs at the Colombian Hotel from 5-8pm.
There will be: complementary finger food, cash bar, raffle, retro music, lift access and fun! Let us know if you are coming along at info@78ers.org.au.
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Parade Saturday 29 February 2020

Two emails have now gone out from the elected Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras 78ers Committee about this Mardi Gras season.
You can still register for the Parade float and go in the draw for a Party ticket by responding to the next email, later in February.
If you ordered a 78ers t-shirt before 2 February, your t-shirt will be posted out next week. Later orders will be listed for next year’s print run.
Mardi Gras asked that this year 78ers carry placards about What Matters to us. Lance Mumby and Karen Askew had a fun day painting placards in the Mardi Gras Workshop.
78ers who have registered for the Parade will be sent an email with Assembly instructions in the week before the Parade. Happy Mardi Gras!

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Regional Mardi Gras Saturday 14 & 28 March 2020
78ers will be travelling to Wagga Wagga and Hay to march in their 2020 Mardi Gras Parades. We also have plans to also attend Newcastle and Tamworth Prides and the Broken Heel Festival later in the year.
To join us in Wagga Wagga and Hay, please contact Helen Gollan on 0427 042 810 text only or Barry Charles on 0404 241 308.
From left: Bob Harvey, Barry Charles and Helen Gollan at Tamworth Pride 2019

Calendar of Events

  • 15 February 2020 – A Lavender Menace? Australia’s Early Lesbian Movement
  • Sunday 16 February 2020 – Mardi Gras Fair Day
  • Saturday 22 February 2020 – Spark Youth Group History Walk led by Robert French
  • Saturday 22 February 2020 - LGBTIQ+ Elders Dance
  • Sunday 23 February 2020 – SPI History Walk led by Robert French: The Colony of Sydney and its Gay history
  • Friday 28 February 2020 – Reunion42: 78ers Pre-Mardi Gras Drinks
  • Saturday 29 February 2020 – Mardi Gras Parade
  • Saturday 14 March 2020 – Wagga Wagga Mardi Gras Parade 
  • Saturday 21 March 2020 - First Mardi Gras Inc. General Meeting
  • Saturday 28 March 2020 – Hay Mardi Gras Parade

Participation Grants

FMG Inc. members can apply for small grants to assist with projects that reflect FMG Inc. objectives. Grants may be used to help with:
  • Part travel costs
  • Part conference registration fees
  • Administrative costs (postage, photocopying)
  • Purchase of materials and resources.
For further details email us at info@78ers.org.au.

Public TALK: Lavender Menace? Australia's Early Lesbian Movement - Feb 15, 2020

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A Lavender Menace? Australia's Early Lesbian Movement

You are invited to join Pride History Group and First Mardi Gras Inc., a community organisation for 78ers, for a public forum discussing Australia's early Lesbian movement.

This event is the first in a series planned for 2020 to celebrate 50 Fabulous Years of Liberation.
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WHEN: 2 - 4pm, Saturday 15 February 2020
WHERE: Benledi House, 194 Glebe Point Road, Glebe (next to the library on the corner of Wigram Road)
RSVP: info@78ers.org.au or via this Facebook event page
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FORUM OVERVIEW:

Given the dominant patriarchal approach to history, it’s unsurprising that the role women played in the early lesbian and gay movement is often given minor consideration to that of men.

Yet lesbians played a pivotal role, despite being faced with misogyny and sexism, even from some homosexual men. The place of lesbians within the Women’s Liberation Movement was also initially contested by some of their sisters. Against these odds, gains in the areas of the status of women, lesbian mothers and opposition to the harmful practices of psychiatry were many.

To explore these issues and mark the 50th anniversary of the founding of the Australasian Lesbian Movement, the Pride History Group and First Mardi Gras Inc. a community organisation for 78ers, are holding a joint forum – A Lavender Menace? Australia’s Early Lesbian Movement.

Speakers will include lesbians who were pioneers members of CAMP and other early lesbian and gay groups.

Newsletter - December 2019

Newsletter - December 2019
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December 2019

Annual General Meeting Saturday 23 November 

Management Committee members elected at the AGM of First Mardi Gras Inc. were:
  • Co-Chairs: Betty Hounslow and Ken Davis
  • Secretary: Diane Minnis
  • Treasurer: Richard Thode
  • Committee Members: Karl Zlotkowski, Barry Charles, Robert French, Rebbell Barnes.
Many thanks to outgoing Secretary, Sandra Gobbo, for all her hard work, and to Garry Wotherspoon for his wise contributions to the committee.

The First Mardi Gras Inc. Annual Report was presented at the AGM. Download and read a copy here

Social Lunch
Saturday 7 December

Join us for an end of year social lunch on Saturday December 7, 2019, 12 noon at the Terminus Hotel, 61 Harris St Pyrmont. RSVP to: rebbellabarnes@gmail.com.

There is a light rail stop with lift access in John Street Square and the 389 bus runs from Park St near Town Hall and stops across the road.

Calendar of Events

  • Saturday 7 December 2019 – Social Lunch, 12 noon, Terminus Hotel, 61 Harris Pyrmont
  • Mid December 2019 – email from SGLMG 78ers Committee to all 78ers to nominate for Parade float
  • Early February 2020 – Community BBQ to discuss supporting isolated older LGBTIQ people
  • Mid February 2020 – Salon78 forum
  • Sunday 16 February 2020 – Mardi Gras Fair Day
  • Saturday 22 February 2020 – Spark Youth Group History Walk led by Robert French
  • Saturday 22 February 2020 - LGBTIQ+ Elders Dance
  • Sunday 23 February 2020 – SPI History Walk led by Robert French: The Colony of Sydney and its Gay history
  • Late February 2020 – 78ers Pre-Mardi Gras Drinks
  • Saturday 29 February 2020 – Mardi Gras Parade
  • Saturday 14 March 2020 – Wagga Wagga Mardi Gras Parade 
  • Saturday 21 March 2020 - First Mardi Gras Inc. General Meeting
  • Saturday 28 March 2020 – Hay Mardi Gras Parade

Participation Grants

FMG Inc. members can apply for small grants to assist with projects that reflect FMG Inc. objectives. Grants may be used to help with:
  • Part travel costs
  • Part conference registration fees
  • Administrative costs (postage, photocopying)
  • Purchase of materials and resources.
For further details email us at info@78ers.org.au.

End of Year Social Lunch - Saturday December 7, 2019

Join us for an end of year social lunch on Saturday December 7, 2019 at 12 midday at the Terminus Hotel in Pyrmont (61 Harris St, Pyrmont). RSVP to Rebbell Barnes via email rebbellabarmes@gmail.com


There is a light rail stop at John Street Square, just across the road (steps / lift access) that goes to Central Station (inbound), or to the inner west suburb of Dulwich Hill (outbound). A regular bus service (389) runs from Pyrmont along Harris St to King St in the CBD before heading through Paddington to Bondi Junction and North Bondi. The bus stop is located on the corner of John and Harris St on the opposite side of the road to The Terminus Hotel.

Terminus Hotel @ 61 Harris St, Pyrmont

Terminus Hotel @ 61 Harris St, Pyrmont